Digest Week 1 Michaelmas Term 2021

MT21, Week 1 (10th - 16th October)

If you have entries for the weekly Digest, please send information to admin@philosophy.ox.ac.uk by midday, Wednesday the week before the event. 

Notices - other Philosophy events, including those taking place elsewhere in the university and beyond

Sophist reading group | 4:15pm-6:15pm | Balliol College

We will start the dialogue from the beginning, from Monday week 1. Anyone who would like to join can email Dimosthenis Patramanis or Hermann Koerner for details.

 

Faraday Institute for Science and Religion | 1:00pm | Online
Tittle: Teaching and learning of science and religion in schools: Perspectives from research on argumentation
Speaker: Sibel Erduran (Oxford)
More information here.

 

Effective Altruism Oxford - Empowering students to have a positive impact | 6:00pm

Title: “Intro to Effective Altruism”

Speaker: Bella Forristal

Effective Altruism is a research field that helps us find the best ways to improve the world, through the use of evidence and careful reasoning. It’s also a community of people who strive to take action on that basis, to have a large positive impact on the world. 

EA Oxford aims to empower Oxford students to use EA ideas in their career. During term, we meet weekly on Tuesdays at the HB Allen Centre, where we hold speaker events, seminar programmes, and workshops, as well as provide a space to meet and network with likeminded students and professionals in EA. 

Each Tuesday at 6pm there’ll be a talk from an EA professional, including prominent philosophers at Oxford such as Hilary Greaves (director of the Global Priorities Institute) and Toby Ord (senior research fellow at the Future of Humanity Institute). Free pizza is provided after the talk.

On Tuesday of 1st Week, we’ll have an Intro to Effective Altruism talk and Q&A (details here). The schedule for the rest of Michaelmas term is on our website, here.
Come along in 1st Week or sign up to our mailing list to learn more. 
 

Reproductive Ethics - Lecture 1: Reproductive Rights and Abortion. Radcliffe Humanities Lecture Room. 11am.

This is the first lecture in a short series, open to all, on Reproductive Ethics. It runs weeks 1-4 of MT21, given by Ms Tess Johnson.

Topic: This lecture introduces students to the start of debates on reproduction in practical ethics, starting with the abortion debate. It presents core arguments for and against abortion, and differentiates between the various conceptions of reproductive rights as positive (requiring state support and thus access to abortion services) or negative (requiring merely non-interference).

Algorithms at Work - Reading Group | 12:30-1:30pm | St Antony’s College and on Zoom.
 
Automated systems are increasingly running workplaces – from everyday management to hiring and firing workers. AI hasn’t come for workers’ jobs: it is managers who see their traditional tasks replaced or supplemented by sophisticated analyses of personal data. The pervasive reliance on ‘people analytics’, monitoring technology and algorithms to measure, control, and sanction workers is highly controversial: whilst fast and efficient, the technology is easily prone to bias and threatens to disperse responsibility into the cloud.

This discussion group will explore the effects of algorithmic control and surveillance and its current and future regulation, drawing on disciplines including law, economics, sociology, and computer science. We will convene weekly in a hybrid format (Thursday, 12:30 – 13:30) at St Antony’s College and on Zoom.

Applications are invited from across the University; further details can be found here.

Weekly reading group on the occasion of the centenary of Ludwig Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus | 6:30-7:30pm | Colin Matthew Room, Radcliffe Humanities

We are delighted to announce that this term we will be hosting a reading group, open to all members of the University and the public, to mark the centenary of Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.

One of the defining texts of the 20th century, Wittgenstein’s first work is notoriously difficult for first-time readers. By working through it together, the problems that baffle us alone or leave us stranded can be solved through discussion, drawing on our individual readings and backgrounds. This is the perfect opportunity to cover a text often sidelined, or marginalised as an eccentricity in the history of ideas.  

The TLP is composed of 7 core propositions. We will endeavour to finish the text by the end of Michaelmas Term (first week of December). We will play it by ear together and see how far we get each session, though we will try to finish one proposition a week where realistic, with a few exceptions where more time is required. 

Every Friday from October 15th, 18:30, at Radcliffe Humanities Building, Woodstock Road.

Please message us at jack.franco@queens.ox.ac.uk or ph21251@bristol.ac.uk to let us know you’re coming, and to receive a copy of the text. We will be using the newly published (Anthem Press) centenary edition, by Luciano Bazzocchi and PMS Hacker (more on this choice in the first session!)

We will offer suggested further reading at the end of sessions. All welcome, students, staff and public.